Copenhagen Climate Change Summit 2009
Copenhagen Climate Change Summit 2009
• In April, the secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, acknowledged the role the US
had played in past climate emissions at a gathering of officials from the
world's 17 largest economies.
• She said the US was "determined to make up for lost time both at home and
abroad". "The US is no longer absent without leave," she said.
• However, Denmark's minister for climate and energy, Connie Hedegaard, has
warned that American leadership on climate change will be undermined if the
Obama administration does not pass laws swiftly to reduce carbon pollution.
What does the summit hope to achieve?
• Officials will try to agree a new climate treaty as a successor to the
Kyoto protocol, the first phase of which expires in 2012.
• But which countries must make the cuts and by how large should they be?
For example, the rapidly growing Chinese economy has recently overtaken
America as the world's largest emitter of carbon dioxide. Yet America has
historically emitted far more emissions than China, and on a per capita
basis Chinese emissions are around a quarter of those of the US.
What are the sticking points?
• The Chinese government argues that it has a moral right to develop and
grow its economy — carbon emissions will inevitably grow with it.
• Problems such as these have cast doubts on whether COP15 can succeed.
There are also concerns about whether any action we take now to prevent
climate change may be too little too late. A Guardian poll revealed almost
nine out of 10 climate scientists do not believe political efforts to restrict
global warming to an additional 2C — the level the EU defines as
"dangerous" — will succeed.
China's economy grew at the fastest pace in 12 years in the second quarter and
inflation surged, prompting speculation the government will raise interest rates and
push the currency higher to cool growth.
China’s air pollution